3 Costly Myths On Insurance
Liz Pulliam Weston is an author of many books and a personal finance columnist for MSN Money. Her 3 Costly Myths About On Insurance is just one of her many contributions to the financial world. The following is from the said article and talks of the 3 myths in insurance that can cost you a lot of money:
Myth: Your benefits should roughly equal the premiums you’ve paid
Many people feel cheated if they aren’t “using” their insurance — in other words, if they pay premiums for years and never make a claim.
That, however, is exactly what you want to happen with most types of insurance.
Sound insane? It’s really not. Most of the time, insurance should be thought of as your protection against true financial catastrophe, not as a buffer against the normal ups and downs of daily living.
You want your homeowners insurance to be there if your house ever burns down, for example, because you probably don’t have enough savings to rebuild your home or pay off your mortgage otherwise. On the other hand, you can easily swing the cost of replacing a pane when Sally down the street knocks a line drive through your window.
So why pay extra for a policy with a low deductible, just so you can get your insurance company to cover a cost you could readily handle on your own?
Opting for deductibles of $500 to $1,000, instead of $100 to $250, can save you as much as 35% on your premiums.
Myth: Insurance should cover disasters that are likely to happen
More than 80% of California homeowners don’t have earthquake insurance. That figure often stuns people from out of state, because of the widely held notion that the Golden State is a bowlful of geological jelly.
Californians, however, know that serious earthquakes are pretty rare. Most are mild, and almost all are very localized. So, the chances of your own home getting totaled in one are actually pretty slim. That excuses Californians from buying coverage, right? Hardly. Similarly, you may not be off the hook if you don’t have flood or windstorm insurance.
* Video: Save money on home insurance
Remember, insurance is meant to protect you from financial catastrophe — disasters from which you could not easily recover on your own.
Some people ignore this advice, figuring the federal government will come through for them in a disaster. You should know, however, that typically this help isn’t free. Most help comes in the form of low-interest loans.
One look at the wake of Hurricane Katrina should make you wary of relying on government help. Even with such aid, many people lost their homes in the 1994 Northridge quake in California. They found they couldn’t simultaneously pay their mortgages and afford places to live while their homes were being rebuilt.
So, if you don’t have enough cash saved up to rebuild your home or pay off the mortgage, and you live in an area where natural disasters are a distinct possibility, you need appropriate coverage.
Myth: Insurance is a rip-off; buy only the minimum required
This idea occasionally surfaces on the Your Money message boards and in e-mails I get from readers. People’s suspicion of the insurance industry can be so profound, they’ll put themselves in real financial danger — the old cut-off-your-schnoz-to-spite-your-face response.
It’s scariest when people skimp on liability insurance. This pays for the damage you do to other people or that they do to themselves on your property.
Say you’re held responsible for an auto accident in which somebody is paralyzed. You can be on the hook for that person’s medical expenses, lost income and care for the rest of his or her life. Injure more than one person, and the cost goes up exponentially.
If you don’t have liability insurance, or you’re carrying too little, most of what you own could be at risk. You could be sued and lose just about everything you’ve spent a lifetime working and saving to accumulate, plus perhaps your future earnings as well. All this because you wanted to save a couple of bucks on your premiums.
A smarter choice is to get enough liability coverage at least to equal your net worth. (Your net worth is everything you own minus everything you owe.) If your net worth is $250,000, for example, boost the liability coverage on both your auto insurance and your homeowners insurance to at least $250,000.





















